Yugoslavia As Precedent For West's Illegal Wars

http://www.hinduonnet.com/fline/stories/20060407002304600.htm


Frontline
The Hindu
March 28, 2006


Balkan scapegoat
JOHN CHERIAN


-This correspondent saw the remnants of bombed-out
radio and television stations and civilian
infrastructure during a visit to Serbia a few months
after the NATO-led war.
Not even diplomatic niceties were observed. An
American cruise missile targeted the Chinese Embassy
located in the diplomatic enclave of Belgrade.
Depleted uranium bombs and cluster bombs were used in
the military campaign. NATO bombs destroyed many
bridges over the Danube, a key waterway in Central
Europe. Many innocent civilians were killed when NATO
jets targeted a passenger train.
-Richard Perle, the neo-conservative ideologue, was
quoted as saying that the Yugoslav war was "the first
precedent" the U.S. used to override United Nations
Security Council resolutions.
-Such was the growing influence of Germany in the
Balkans that even Washington became a little wary. In
1992, the Bavarian Interior Minister claimed: "Helmut
Kohl has succeeded where neither Emperor Wilhelm nor
Hitler could."


The death in solitary confinement of Slobodan
Milosevic on March 18 closes another chapter in the
bloody history of the Balkans.

In the last five years, Milosevic was languishing in a
jail cell at The Hague, charged with genocide, war
crimes and crimes against humanity.

He was the first head of state to be brought before a
tribunal under international jurisdiction and the
first to die in custody.

Yugoslavia was wracked by civil war during the 1990s.
Milosevic was only one of the main players in the
Balkan tragedy.

According to many historians, the West too was
culpable in the atrocities and massacres that preceded
the break-up of Yugoslavia.

Most Serbians attribute Milosevic's death to "victor's
justice". The leader of the Serbian Socialist Party
issued the following statement after receiving the
news of Milosevic's death:

"Slobodan Milosevic, the president of the Socialist
Party of Serbia and a former President of Serbia and
Yugoslavia, was murdered at the tribunal in The Hague.
The decision of the tribunal to disallow Milosevic's
medical treatment at the Bakunin Institute in Moscow
represents a prescribed death sentence against
Milosevic. Truth and justice were on his side and this
is why they used a strategy of gradual killing of
Slobodan Milosevic. The responsibility for his death
is clearly with The Hague tribunal."

Milosevic was born on August 29, 1941. He joined the
Serbian Communist Party in 1959 at the age of 18.

Milosevic had a history of high blood pressure and
heart problems.

Days before he died, he had told his personal
physician that he suspected that he was being slowly
poisoned.

Many people in the Balkans believe that The Hague
tribunal preferred his death in prison, realising
after a trial lasting four and a half years that a
verdict of guilty could not be passed against him.
....
Harold Pinter, the Nobel laureate, observed that the
"U.S./NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organisation) court
trying Slobodan Milosevic was totally illegitimate."

Milosevic had insisted on conducting his own defence.

A trained lawyer, he meticulously cross-examined the
hundreds of witnesses paraded by the war crimes
prosecutor.

Dressed formally in a suit and tie, Milosevic on
several occasions exposed the West's complicity in the
Balkan tragedy.

Given his intimate knowledge of the West's
machinations in the Balkans, especially the 78-day
NATO-led war, Milosevic was in a vantage position to
expose the duplicity of leaders such as Bill Clinton
and Tony Blair.

During the Dayton talks in 1995, Milosevic had
interacted closely with top officials of the Clinton
administration.

Even Milosevic's critics acknowledge that the "Dayton
accords" which brought peace to the Balkans in 1995,
was possible to a large extent owing to Belgrade's
flexibility. That accord had formalised the split in
the Yugoslav Federation, with Croatia and Bosnia going
their separate ways.

But the game plan of the West was to dismantle
completely what was left of the Yugoslav Federation.

It was the "massacre" in Racak, in the Serbian
province of Kosovo, that provided the ruse for NATO
intervention.

The Yugoslav authorities claimed that the secessionist
Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) had staged the entire
episode.

Kosovo is considered the traditional heartland of the
Serb people.

They are now a minority, drastically outnumbered by
ethnic Albanians.

A team of Finnish forensic experts sent by the
European Union supported the version put out by the
authorities in Belgrade.

That Milosevic still had a following was evident from
the outpouring of grief that followed his death in
many parts of the erstwhile Yugoslavia.

Thousands of people queued up patiently in the
freezing cold in Belgrade to have a last glimpse of
their leader.

The West had pressured the powers that be in Belgrade
to hand over Milosevic.

The Bush administration had threatened to cut off all
aid to the government.

Millions of dollars of International Monetary
Fund/World Bank money that the war-shattered Serbian
economy needed were withheld. Promises of putting
Serbia's application for membership of the European
Union on the fast track were made.

At The Hague, Milosevic meticulously detailed the
American role in the disintegration of the Yugoslav
Federation.

However, the U.S.-backed court deprived Milosevic the
right to represent himself.

Though much of the world lost interest in the
Milosevic trial after the events of September 11, the
proceedings continued to be aired live in many parts
of former Yugoslavia.

The thousands of civilians who had been affected by
the NATO bombings had hoped for a sympathetic hearing.


This correspondent saw the remnants of bombed-out
radio and television stations and civilian
infrastructure during a visit to Serbia a few months
after the NATO-led war.

Not even diplomatic niceties were observed. An
American cruise missile targeted the Chinese Embassy
located in the diplomatic enclave of Belgrade.

Depleted uranium bombs and cluster bombs were used in
the military campaign. NATO bombs destroyed many
bridges over the Danube, a key waterway in Central
Europe. Many innocent civilians were killed when NATO
jets targeted a passenger train.

Contemporary historians believe that the 78-day war
waged by NATO against Yugoslavia was a forerunner to
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Like Saddam Hussein before him, Western governments
and their pliant media demonised Milosevic.

To justify American military intervention, President
Clinton described the war against the Yugoslav
Federation as "humanitarian intervention" to stop the
ethnic cleansing of Albanians in the Serbian province
of Kosovo.

After President George W. Bush took office, he
justified his war in Afghanistan as "self-defence".
Similarly, the war in Iraq was conducted on the
pretext of removing "weapons of mass destruction".

Richard Perle, the neo-conservative ideologue, was
quoted as saying that the Yugoslav war was "the first
precedent" the U.S. used to override United Nations
Security Council resolutions.

Before NATO went to war, the Security Council had
passed an even-handed resolution, which condemned
"both the excessive use of force by the Serbian police
against civilians" and the "acts of terrorism by the
Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA)".

In the post-Soviet era, strong leaders such as
Slobodan Milosevic have not been to the liking of the
West.

Milosevic was not only determined to keep the Yugoslav
Federation intact but was also strongly against the
economic prescriptions of the IMF/World Bank.

Yugoslavia had a strong public sector. The reforms
instituted by the international banking institutions
in the 1980s had resulted in massive unemployment and
the collapse of the banking system.

Milosevic was first elected President of the Yugoslav
Federation in 1989.

Once in office, he displayed an independent and
combative streak, unlike the leaders of other Central
and East European countries who were kowtowing to the
West.

A leading American daily commented in the mid-1990s
that Milosevic "was unable to grasp the political
message of the fall of the Berlin Wall. Other
Communist politicians accepted the Western model, but
Milosevic went the other way."

The collapse of the Soviet bloc had an immediate
impact on the Yugoslav Federation.

The West, especially Germany, encouraged Slovenia and
Croatia to break away from the Federation.

Franjo Tudjman, leader of the Croats, and Alija
Izetbegovic, leader of the Bosnian Muslims, began
their campaign for the break-up of the Yugoslav
Federation.

During the Second World War both these leaders were
supporters of the Nazis, yet both Tudjman and
Izetbegovic died peacefully in office. No charges of
war crimes or genocide were brought against them
though there are documented cases of massacres of
Serbs in Croatia and Bosnia.

Western machinations against the Yugoslav Federation
became evident in early 1991.

The then German Chancellor, Helmut Kohl, supported the
break-up of the Yugoslav Federation by advocating
"independence" for Croatia and Slovenia.

Such was the growing influence of Germany in the
Balkans that even Washington became a little wary. In
1992, the Bavarian Interior Minister claimed: "Helmut
Kohl has succeeded where neither Emperor Wilhelm nor
Hitler could."

Washington did not want Germany or the E.U. to be the
pre-eminent power in the region.

The Clinton administration influenced the Izetbegovic
government against signing the peace agreements the
Europeans negotiated in 1993.

This action needlessly prolonged the war in Bosnia for
another two years but ultimately helped realise the
American goal to install NATO as the continental
police and restrict Russian access to the
Mediterranean Sea.

Many observers of the Balkan scene believe that it was
the meddling of the West in Bosnia-Herzegovina that
precipitated the internecine bloodletting.

According to them, dividing the state on the basis of
its ethnic composition, as recommended by the E.U.,
was the first serious mis-step.

The three groups had coexisted harmoniously since the
war; 7 per cent of the Bosnian population was mixed
and Sarajevo, the capital, was among the most
cosmopolitan cities in the world. As the state headed
for secession under the E.U.'s prodding, civil war was
inevitable.

Izetbegovic used incendiary rhetoric. During the 1990
election campaign, he issued an "Islamic Declaration"
which stated that "there can be neither peace nor
coexistence between the Islamic religion and those
social and political institutions that are
non-Islamic."

He also invited Islamic fighters fresh from their
jehad in Afghanistan into Bosnia.

Milosevic complained to the international community
that Al Qaeda elements were active in Bosnia and
Kosovo. But this was before the events of 9/11 and the
Americans did not object to the presence of Arab,
Pakistani and Chechen fighters in the Balkans.

In the civil war that followed, all sides were guilty
of ethnic cleansing.

Some Serb leaders in Bosnia, such as Radovan Karadzic,

were no more than right-wing nationalists.

In fact, Milosevic had on several occasions objected
to the activities of the Serb militias. His wife, Mira
Markovic, was also very critical of the Serb militias,
which were responsible for the massacres in Srebrenica
and Sarajevo.

However, more than 150,000 Serbs were forced out of
Krajina by the Croatian army, intent on ethnic
cleansing.

When this writer was in Belgrade, thousands of them
were living in squalid refugee camps on the outskirts
of Belgrade.

                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

                                        [email protected]

                                    http://www.antic.org/

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